There are some so called renewables that are not really green, especially eco fuels. The only one that’s truly green is electricity generated from the Earths elements, wind, sun, wave etc. but we have the capability to switch over to that pretty easily. They are not cheap to set up, but once in production, they are very cheap to run compared to using fossil fuels. They absolutely are a credible option right now.
Any good business manager would say “don’t just come with a problem, bring a solution too”. So here are some examples of renewables that could be sorted right now, but we hardly harness:
- Solar panels on roofs of houses and cars. I’m not sure about the viability of the latter, but it seems bloody obvious and I don’t understand why it isn’t used. Even if it adds 3-4 k onto the cost of a car, it would pay for itself pretty quickly. Every house roof should have one. I know there are questions about recycling solar panels, but that’s just small parts of the over all mechanism and some investment would sort this pretty quickly. Any waste would be a drop in the ocean compared to the plastics we throw away all the time.
- Wind turbines in place of electricity pylons. Cannot argue about the aesthetics.
- Hydroelectric dams. These can be used as giant batteries in the event that stagnant weather restricts the power generated from other sources.
- Tidal and wave power. We have one of the best potentials in the world for both. Tidal is especially reliable!
- Insulation. We throw away masses of British wool that could be used.
There are some downsides to each of the above - they usually cause temp damage to the environment during production, but their net benefit far outweighs any downsides.